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IPR-intensive industries: contribution to economic performance and employment in the European Union A joint study between the Office for Harmonization in the Internal Market and the European Patent Office Published 30 September 2013 Introduction: The value of intellectual property in Europe This presentation is based on the main findings of the first ever EU-wide study on the value of intellectual property rights to the economy of the EU. How do trade marks, designs, patents, copyrights and geographical indications contribute to employment, GDP, remuneration and trade? Intellectual property rights – an overview Methodology In order to determine which industries are IPR-intensive, the register databases of OHIM and EPO were matched with the commercial database ORBIS. Using this data, the number of trade marks, designs and patents per employee was calculated for each industry, and the industries which were above average according to this measure were considered to be IPR-intensive. For copyright, a standard methodology developed by WIPO was applied, and for Geographical Indications, data from DG AGRI was used. For more information on the methodology of the study, please visit www.oami.europa.eu. IPR-intensive industries There are a total of 321 IPR-intensive industries. Most of them are intensive in more than one type of IPR. Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to employment 26% of all EU jobs were directly generated by IPR-intensive industries during the period 20082010. An additional 9% were generated indirectly, by industries that supply goods and services to the IPR-intensive industries, for a total of 35% of all EU jobs. Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to employment 56.5 million EU jobs out of 218 million were directly generated by IPRintensive industries. 20 million additional jobs were generated by these industries indirectly. Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to GDP 39% of total economic activity (GDP) in the European Union was generated by IPR-intensive industries from 2008-2010. This totals over € 4.7 trillion annually. Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to remuneration IPR-intensive industries pay significantly more than other industries, with a wage premium of over 40%. Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to trade (imports) Even industries producing energy are IPR-intensive. For that reason, 88% of EU imports consist of products from IPRintensive industries. Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to trade (exports) However, an even higher share of EU exports 90% - is accounted for by IPR-intensive industries. Copyright: WIPO vs USPTO methodologies USPTO adaptation of WIPO methodology: very strict, only content provision, 33 industries considered copyright-intensive “Pure” WIPO methodology: broader definition, 49 industries considered core copyright-intensive “Full” WIPO methodology: including also non-core copyright-intensive industries Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to employment by Member State IPR-intensive industries directly contribute 25.9% of employment in the EU. Note: As Croatia was not a part of the EU at the time of the study, it is not highlighted on the following maps. Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to GDP by Member State IPR-intensive industries contribute 38.6% of GDP in the EU. Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to employment by Member State – trade mark In the EU as a whole, trade mark-intensive industries contribute 20.8% of employment. Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to GDP by Member State – trade mark In the EU as a whole, trade mark-intensive industries contribute 33.9% of GDP. Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to employment by Member State – design Design-intensive industries contribute 12.2% of employment in the EU. Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to GDP by Member State – design Design-intensive industries contribute 12.8% of GDP in the EU. Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to employment by Member State – patent Patent-intensive industries contribute 10.3% of employment in the EU. Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to GDP by Member State – patent Patent-intensive industries contribute 13.9% of GDP in the EU. Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to employment by Member State – copyright Copyright-intensive industries contribute 3.2% of employment in the EU. Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to GDP by Member State – copyright Copyright-intensive industries contribute 4.2% of GDP in the EU. Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to employment by Member State – geographical indication GI-intensive industries contribute 0.2% of employment in the EU. They are an important source of jobs in several countries. Contribution of IPR-intensive industries to GDP by Member State – geographical indication GI-intensive industries contribute 0.1% of GDP in the EU. IPR Origin – Trade mark Which EU Member States create the most trade marks? IPR Origin – Design Which EU Member States create the most designs? IPR Origin – Patent Which EU Member States create the most patents? IPR contribution to job creation IPR contribution to job creation Job creation can be considered another positive IPR contribution to the European Union. Comparison with the USA Comparing the results for the EU with those of a USA study* reveals that the contributions of IPR-intensive industries are similar. *undertaken by the US Patent and Trademark Office What’s next: Phase 2 of the study Phase 2 of the study drills down to the micro (company) level. It considers each company’s use of EU-level as well as national IP rights. Companies that use IPR intensively will be compared to companies that use IPR less intensively, controlling for variables such as country, industry and other relevant factors. The objective is to analyse whether the use of IPR has an impact on financial performance, employment and growth of the companies. In addition, the use of IPR by company size (micro/SME/large) will be analysed. Phase 2 is already ongoing and will be completed during the second half of 2014.